Indianapolis Times, Volume 44, Number 278, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1933 — Page 8
PAGE 8
DEATH TARES TRIO OF AGEO CITY RESIDENTS Two Men and Woman Are Claimed: Funeral Rites to Be Held. Following an illness of two month George W Miles. 78. of 2715 North Illinois street, retired poultry dealer, died Thursday in St. Vincent s hospital. Mr. Miles retired from business seventeen years ago. He had been a irsident of Indianapolis more than fifty years. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. Lifelong Resident Dies Funeral services for Robert Bently, 72, a lifelong resident of Indiana. who died Thursday in the home of his sister, Mrs. Herbert Morrison, 25 North Oxford street, v ill be held at 10:30 Saturday in the ,J. o. Wilson funeral home. 1230 Prospect street. Burial will be in Greenwood cemetery. Aged Woman Is Taken Following an attack of acute pa tritis. Miss Anna Marie Kimmel, 70, a resident of Indianapolis twenty years, died Thursday night in the home of her sister, Mrs. Catherine Cassidy, 1440 Union street. Funeral services will be held at fj 30 Monday morning in the Sacred Heart Catholic church. Burial will be in Madison, Ind. Funeral Rites Fixed Last, rites for Dr. Fred V/ Mayer. Marion county health commissioner, who died Wednesday at his home. 3843 North Pennsylvania street, will be held at 2 Saturday in the home. The . services will be private, and Dr. J. Ambrose Dunkel. pastor of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church, will ofliciate. Center lodge, No. 23. F and A. M . will conduct services at the grave, which will be in Crown Hill cemetery. Last Rites to Be Held Funeral services for Denver R. Hayes, 21, of 1626 Alton avenue, who committed suicide by burning in an automobile Wednesday night, were to be held at 1:30 this afternoon at, the Conkle funeral home, 1034 West Michigan street. The body will be taken to Columbus, Ga„ where Hayes had spent most of his life, for burial. Domestic difficulties and despondency over ill health and lack of employment are said to have prompted the suicide. Wreckage of the automobile with the charred body of Hayes slumped under the steering wheel was found in a woods 100 feet from the Hardin road at a point near the High School road. HOLD FIVE MEN ON DELINQUENCY COUNT Face Charges After Raid; Four Minor Girls Found in Home. Five men, one the father of three small boys, are under arrest as the result of a police raid on the home of Patrick McCleary, 35, of 205 Minerva street, in which four minor girls were found. McCleary, father of three boys, all under 13, is charged with child neglect and contributing to juvenile delinquency. George Wilder, 21, of 2131 North Illinois street.; Albert Hendricks, 19, of 221 South Illinois street: Robert McDade, 20, and Joel McDade, 22, both of 142 West Twentieth street, are charged with contributing to child neglect and contributing to delinquency. The four girls found at the place, ranging in age from 14 to 17, were taken to the county juvenile detention home. Police made the raid on complaint of the father of two of the girls. DANCES TO HIS DEATH Closing Waltz of Evening Fatal to Oregon Lodge Man. Jt'i I nited Press ST. HELENS. Ore., March 31. The last dance of *the evening proved to be the dance of death for P, C. Jacobson at a local lodge hall. As the strains of the closing waltz died on the air. Jacobson fell lifeless on the floor.
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Let’s Explore Your Mind
BY DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM, D. Sc. , ‘inpf j iStStS. Iw oc OTHER \ a “xA / / BE,NOS? \v ; i ii j d? i|S LOVED ONE J ' 'l6 IT PO&&I&LE FT* r?B I] OUT OF \V ONE CHILD REALLV TO \3®f am MIND? V BE MORE I NIELLI 6ENT I & THAN IT6 BROTHERS AND 6I&TEC€>; ' *XSBV • / \ til® I AND MORE INTELLI6ENT THAN 'LjAi 15 | EITHER THE FATHER OR MOTHER?
1. No. Professor E. L. Thorndike of Columbia university, who founded the scientific study of animal psychology in the Late ’nineties, says lie has never seen any animal imitate another or a human being. Also, Yerkes and Kohler, authorities on the minds of apes, agree with this. Thorndike says that if you lay two small objects down and pick one up and put it into your mouth, a monkey will often do the same thing. But he explains this is not due to imitation but to the habit monkeys have of stuffing everything they can into their mouths. Numerous other animal psychologists interpret apparent imitation in animals from the same point, of veiw. 2. No. When you say, “I will not think of that person,” you might as well say, “I will think of that person. Your mind only will respond to the way you really feel about the matter.
COMEDY TO BE GIVEN Two-Act Show to Be Presented by Young Church Group. "The Count and the Co-Eld,” a two-act musical comedy, will be presented by the young people of the First Friends church at the annual
f ill—Jm star ts i| TO daY!! ipPyr She took through cunplf Jr 'WB|jr n i n ff the chances life ’ jSpli '**** k \w!w had denied her .. . playJO|2 ing men's rules .. . with ! sir a woman ‘ s weapons. !' M JOAN BLONDELL CHESTER MORRIS PARAMOUNT NEWS * ‘DOUBLING IN I .. LEASE THE QUICKIES” ; BREAKERS” " ith ni- Marjorie Beebe f AUNT JEMIMA f MILLIE CREAGER rt*tM Hoop < artunn A W / : ‘‘BIKTIIDAV PARTY” tStf Al k ® !R| a*J| c Wj 1; W ! J. ® |
Vti or no The best way is to seek new friends, associations and, if possible, new loves. If this course is not open, then try to achieve anew absorption in your work, or in some hobby that will occupy your mind. For, as long as something else does not occupy your mind, you may be sure the loved one will occupy it. 3. Yes., it is precisely what we would expect knowing the laws of heredity because those little chemical packages called ‘‘determiners,” that are in the first life cell from which we are born, are mixed in all sorts of ways. One child gets one combination of these "factors” as biologists call them. Another gets some other combination and now and then a child gets a better combination than either parent had. In fact, this is why no two people are born alike, except "identical twins.” They are almost exactly alike because they are both born from one-germ cell.
spring party of Mystic Tie lodge, No. 398. F and A. M., to be held Saturday night in the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. Dancing, cards, and a children’s party will follow the auditorium exercise. Frank L. Moore is chairman of the committee in charge.
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TINES
PRESBYTERIANS AT SOUTHPORT WANTj>ASTQR Appeal to Church Chiefs for Appointment of the Rev. L. E. Markin. An appeal to the Indianapolis Presbytery for appointment of the Rev. Luther E. Markin of Mishai waka, as pastor of the Southport j Presbyterian church, was voted by members of the Southport congregation at the annual meeting Thursday night. The church has been without an appointed pastor since March, 1932. Mr. Markin having been serving as supply pastor. The annual meeting marked the hundredth anniversary of the founding of the church. A supper was attended by more than 200 persons. An engrossed parchment, commemorating the founding, was presented the church by Jack Williams, elder. Three other elders were re-elected. They are G. G. Derbyshir, H. Zieg- | lar Dietz and Orange S. Davis. ! Howard C. Smith was elected elder to fill the vacancy caused by death j of John Smock. j Three deacons, Rufus Munford, Miss Rachel McLain and P. B. | Bailey, were re-clected, and the fol- | lowing trustees were chosen: Fred ■ Prosbst, Jeff Townsend and William O. Penrod.
MOTION PICTURES : SEE jM^BfATTV "I Knpw Every&nily" |
"Early in March ’the"sensatinal qtT^ movie “Gabriel Over the White W b ■ House,” was completed in Hollywood- 9 AV? § One stirring scene shows the President B * 1 . !w of the United States (played by Walter B B Huston) proclaiming a civilian army B NEVER TO BE jto get jobs at army pay from the B SHOWN IN ANY H j government. On March 21st President B OTHER THEATRE tl Roosevelt proposed a similar plan! m J r ’‘ c C l” YI If fTSBRIEt I WHITE HOUSE t WALTER I GREATEST PRESIDENT nUjIUI I SINCE LINCOLN? I KAREN I■ I With almost unbelievable ac- ■■ H 1 curacy. “Gabriel Over the White ft- lU|AQE CV I I House" mirrors many of the senIfS\Fl\isSb I H < sational developments in WashH mAMfUAT v ~. ir . §3 ington that have come to pass Mgj ckANGHOT TONE H : during the past few weeks! (English idol) & Banks! Unemployment! Beer! ARTHUR BYRON IP Veterans! The Farmer! All of 8? nins/ir isa these problems are solved by Jud y DIIKIE MUUnE fl Hammond (Walter Huston) hailed f? IFAM PARKFQ Ii by the press and the nation as the jy uwhiV Mrifti. i m greatest President of the United W C. HENRY GORDON 1 States since Abraham Lincoln. B Added Featurettes ¥. /Sv\ TAXI BOYS COMEDY /l>Ec\ Bilo $ ) bri ' ;g em back a wife /j B \Ntwne/ HF.ARST METROTONE NEWS g| FLIP the FROG CARTOON j
AMUSEMENTS ANOTHERWMAV.E OF XSHOW Oi 1 \K#BUDDY M\Nm\jll I 1 /@\4o people 40 /£&\ H T V°ifci7AND feature pictures (V*of J f | L. \ /SEE OUR NEW lU.UMINATED RUNWAY A I fgitPWITHA HOST of BEAUTIFUL GIRLS
All In a Day Child Calmly Tells of School on Fire: 1.600 Are Rescued. R;i I nited Prrst Philadelphia. March 31— a girl in the fifth grade at Walton public school, raised her hand today for permission to speak, and when it was given, said: "Teacher, the building is on fire.” The teacher notified other teachers and they marshalled the 1.600 pupils out ot the building. Firemen extinguished the fire which caused slight damage. Steals Vending Machine A young man who ordered an egg sandwich in a sandwich shop early today, didn’t wait for it, according to an employe, Harris Lee, 56 North Brookville road, but left in haste with a vending machine containing $6 and chewing gum. MOTION PICTURES i®r “Nur Am Rhein” “Only on the Rhine*’ Starting Today at 5 P. M. Lovr, drama and comedy in the | English Rhine Occupation Admission, 25 cents at all times.
GANG SUSPECTS ARE IDENTIFIED Branded as Robbers by Louisville Residents: Four Are Viewed. Seven Louisville < Ky.) residents Thursday identified four of five men accused of the machine gun murder oi Police Sergeant Lester E. Jones as having taken part in three robberies at Louisville. Those identified were George Schwartz, Fred Adams. A1 Thompson and Edward Miller. A fifth prisoner. Willie Mason, was not viewed. He is in city hospital suffering from a gunshot wound said to have been inflicted during one of the Louisville robberies.
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a $ 25 °° in Cash 4 A y 0 g e Given Away § BETSY ROSS NAME CONTEST Additional prizes of five one-pound boxes of our famous “Lavender Sweets” Chocolates. The Betsy Ross Candy Shops, Inc., have, for the past two years, sold their delicious Milk Chocolate assortment without a name. The increasing demand for this package makes it imperative ihat we secure a name that will properly describe this delicious popular package. HERE IS ALL YOU DO Believing that you must try these luscious milk chocolates before you can possibly suggest a name that will amply describe them, we ask that you go to any Betsy Ross Shop, purchase a box of the milk chocolates, and the sales girl will hand you a contest blank on which will be printed the simple rules governing the contest. This is the only way a contest blank may be secured because we do not want any one to name this package until they have actually tried our milk chocolates. Contest Closes at Midnight April Bth, 1933 2nd Prize So 3rd-7th Prizes 1 lb.
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TRY A WANT AD IN THETIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS,
_3IARCH 31. 1933
I in memoriam It is natural to want the best service to honor a loved one who has departed. All Standard services are thoughtfully arranged and executed it prices fair and low.
